If you KNOW there i a lien and you are/should be paying paynents on the car, NO, you cant do anything with it until you pay for it. Good try, but no candy.
as long as the car is legal to drive on the road, (if you plan to do so) yes you can do what ever you want with it
The bank should be listed as a lienholder on the title. If you sold it, the bank would have to be paid the amount you owe them from the proceeds. Otherwise, you could be inviting possible criminal and civil charges for selling an item that technically wasn't fully yours, not to mention, whoever you sell the car to may not be able to even get a title due to the existing lien.
If you were issued an Owner's Policy and now think there are defects in the chain of title, (the cloud must be from prior owners, not from the time you have owned it as title only covers the prior owners acts, not yours), then you can file a claim against the title agency that issued the Owner's Policy to you.You cannot file a claim if you do not have an Owner's Policy because the Lender/Mortgage Policy is issued only for the benefit of the Lender.
You can get a duplicate title at your local dmv.
A car that is actually YOURS cannot be repossessed, as it's paid off. If you have a vehicle being repossessed, they're able to do this because it's actually the finance company which owns that vehicle and possesses their title. A recovery agent can, on behalf of the lienholder, go onto private property in order to recover the lienholder's property - with limitations. They cannot cross a locked gate, and they cannot enter a locked building.
The pink slip Also known as the title is just piece of paper. It should only be in possession of the owner or a person or company having a loan against the title. So if you have Lent money against the car you may have a title that is not yours.
WRONG...no candy for you. As long as there is a leinholder on the TITLE and a contract in DEFAULT, you DONT own it. When it is paid off, free and clear, then its yours.
You failed to payback the loan thus the title company became the owner of the car. You have no rights to information regarding a car that's not yours. I can guess that you believe any addition amount the title company got for the car over what you owed them should be yours. This is not true either because, as stated, the title company was the legal owner at the time of auction and thus retains all proceeds. If the car sold for less than you owed them and they come after you for the difference then they must show you the information you're asking about.
If you do not have an Owner's Title Insurance Policy (meaning an Owner's Policy you took out when you bought the property OR the current owner's Back title if this is a property you are buying), you as the current owner, or the seller as the currentowner, will need to clear prior owner's chain of title. This is one of the reasons it is very important to have the property searched before you buy and to make the small investment into Owner's Title insurance. If the liens are judgments (meaning the prior owners actually had court proceedings filed against them), you or your attorney will need to contact the creditors to find out if the debt was ever paid. Sometimes common names come up in the title search that are not actually your party to the chain of title - In most states lien automatically attach to the property, not the person. Therefore, even though the liens are not yours, they do belong to the property. If you are the owner of the property and you HAVE an Owner's Policy, it is a claim against the title agency and underwriter who did the initial searches and issued the policy. You would go back to them for remedy as they should have caught this when you were buying the property and before they insured.
if you can find an officer who agrees that repo title does indeed suffice. but many officers feel it is a civil matter. but, yet....if you have in hand a title with your name on it, as owner and seller of vehicle....its yours. good luck in finding officers who agree. some do, some dont
find the owner that has the title. if not available you would either need a bill of sale or lien sale. the owner must be contacted but if no response I believe it can be yours. double check with your dmv Call Geographic Services Inc at 214-727-0148. They have helped me many times and have done a great job.
our freedom not yours!
You can link that page into yours by anchor. Get the value into JavaScript and get it into your title.